U.S. News & World Report on gun control

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From USNews.com, republished from the April 7, 2007, issue of U.S. News & World Report. Well worth reading.

Feeling Safe Isn't Safe
By Michael Barone
Posted 4/29/07

The murders two weeks ago at Virginia Tech naturally set off a cry in the usual quarters-the New York Times, the London-based Economist-for stricter gun control laws. Democratic officeholders didn't chime in, primarily because they believe they were hurt by the issue in 2000 and 2004, but most privately agree.

What most discussions of this issue tend to ignore is that we have two tracks of political debate and two sets of laws on gun control. At the federal level there has been a push for more gun control laws since John Kennedy was assassinated in 1963, and some modest restrictions have been passed. At the state level something entirely different has taken place. In 1987 Florida passed a law allowing citizens who could demonstrate that they were law-abiding and had sufficient training to obtain permits on demand to own and carry concealed weapons. In the succeeding 20 years many other states have passed such laws, so that today you can, if you meet the qualifications, carry concealed weapons in 40 states with 67 percent of the nation's population (including Vermont, with no gun restrictions at all).

When Florida passed its concealed-weapons law, I thought it was a terrible idea. People would start shooting each other over traffic altercations; parking lots would turn into shooting galleries. Not so, it turned out. Only a very, very few concealed-weapons permits have been revoked. There are only rare incidents in which people with concealed-weapons permits have used them unlawfully. Ordinary law-abiding people, it turns out, are pretty trustworthy.

Unfounded fears. I'm not the only one to draw such a conclusion. When she was Michigan's attorney general, Democrat Jennifer Granholm opposed the state's concealed-weapons law, which took effect in 2001. But now, as governor, she's not seeking its repeal. She says that her fears-like those I had about Florida's law 20 years ago-proved to be unfounded. So far as I know, there are no politically serious moves to repeal any state's concealed-weapons laws. In most of the United States, as you go to work, shop at the mall, go to restaurants, and walk around your neighborhood, you do so knowing that some of the people you pass by may be carrying a gun. You may not even think about it. But that's all right. Experience has shown that these people aren't threats.

Virginia has a concealed-weapons law. But Virginia Tech was, by the decree of its administrators, a "gun-free zone." Those with concealed-weapons permits were not allowed to take their guns on campus and were disciplined when they did. A bill was introduced in the House of Delegates to allow permit holders to carry guns on campus. When it was sidetracked, a Virginia Tech administrator hailed the action and said that students, professors, and visitors would now "feel safe" on campus. Tragically, they weren't safe. Virginia Tech's "gun-free zone" was not gun free. In contrast, killers on other campuses were stopped by faculty or bystanders who had concealed-weapons permits and brandished their guns to stop the killing.

We may hear more about gun control at the national level. The D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals recently ruled that the District of Columbia's ban on handguns violates the Second Amendment's right "to keep and bear arms." Judge Laurence Silberman's strong opinion argues that this is consistent with the Supreme Court's ruling in a 1939 case upholding a federal law banning sawed-off shotguns; limited regulation is allowed, Silberman wrote, but not a total ban. Somewhere on the road between a law banning possession of nuclear weapons and banning all guns the Second Amendment stands in the way. This is the view as well of the liberal constitutional law scholar Laurence Tribe. The Supreme Court may take the case, which is in conflict with other circuits' rulings.

If it upholds the D.C. decision, there is still room for reasonable gun regulation. The mental health ruling on the Virginia Tech killer surely should have been entered into the instant check database to prevent him from buying guns. The National Rifle Association is working with gun control advocate Rep. Carolyn McCarthy to improve that database. But even as we fine-tune laws to make sure guns don't get into the wrong hands, maybe the opinion elites will realize that in places where gun ownership is widespread, we're safer than in a "gun-free zone."

This story appears in the May 7, 2007 print edition of U.S. News & World Report.
 
Yeah. My heart sank when I got my copy of the magazine today and saw that Barone was writing about gun control. And then I read it.

Smart people do have open minds.

By the way, that issue of U.S. News & World Report should be available now in groceries and other stores that sell magazines. It's worth buying the issue, partly to have it in print to show other people, and partly to reward the magazine with increased sales. Since gun owners boycott businesses that offend them, it's only fair to spend a little money to reward a magazine for an article that will do them a lot of good.
 
I don't see why East Coast Eloi were so concerned about the commoners carrying guns. We've been carrying for generations in Indiana, far longer than Florida's reforms that he cites, and there have been no widespread anarchy.:p Of course, East Coast Eloi cannot find Indiana on a marked map so I should not be surprised.;)

I wish Mr. Barone would write more about the Miller decision. If he did, he would see what a sham "gun control" is.:)
 
Comment by El Tejon:

Of course, East Coast Eloi cannot find Indiana on a marked map so I should not be surprised.

That's 'cuz you is in fly-over country. There ain't nothing between the coasts that's marked on their maps. :neener:
 
A big change for US News. I canceled my subscription perhaps fifteen years ago when they published an article favoring handgun bans because drug dealers were being made paraplegics and quadraplegics because of drug turf wars. Their reason for supporting the bans was that the drug dealers didn't have health insurance and the cost of their treatment was borne by the taxpayer.

Pilgrim
 
I always thought on the average they were far above most journalism. I cancelled because I hated how thin the magazine got, despite the heavy bias towards advertising.
 
Well, after subscribing to several other news magazines that seem to be written by Martians on L.S.D., I think I'll give these guys a try.
 
Well, after subscribing to several other news magazines that seem to be written by Martians on L.S.D., I think I'll give these guys a try.

That's a pretty good characterization of mainstream media. :)
 
The National Rifle Association is working with gun control advocate Rep. Carolyn McCarthy to improve that database.

Improve an unconstitutional system to make gun grabbers happy???
 
bully for them.

my letter to the editor:
I recently read a copy of Michael Barone's "Feeling safe isn't safe" on the internet and was amazed to find a calm, intelligent and appropriate discussion of gun policies that didn't sound like it was written by Sarah Brady.

I canceled my subscription to US News back around 1993 because of the out of control bias. But if Mr. Barone's article is the beginning of a trend back toward news and commentary, and away from the slobbering fury of a progressive soapbox, I might have to renew.

Thank you for the article.
 
great letter there taliv. We also need to remember to encourage publishers when they do get it right
 
Improve an unconstitutional system to make gun grabbers happy???

I know that a lot of folks here feel the same as you do, but I respectfully disagree. I simply cannot imagine that the Framers intended that the "town nut job" be guaranteed the right to own and/or carry a firearm. I'd bet that Franklin and Jefferson would have been the first to advocate taking away the guns of someone who was a clear threat to their community.

And I'm not talking about PTSD or seeing a psychiatrist just to talk. I'm talking about the people who wear tinfoil hats to block the government behavior control radiowaves. I'm talking about schizophrenics and others who a court has deemed necessary to be institutionalzed based on a trained professional's evaluation.

By the way, that was a great article.
 
Historically, the press has been our active enemy.

Perhaps this is a turning point moment.
The day after the VT shootings as I was starting to really digest what happened I really was afraid that it would be 'THE' incident that would really give the antis some serious momentum in the media and court of public opinion. That it would herald the end of gun rights as we know them, that we would end up like Australia or the UK. I have hope now that it may go the other way and make people realize what we have been trying to tell them for years. Too bad it took a tragedy like this to do it though.
 
I know that a lot of folks here feel the same as you do, but I respectfully disagree. I simply cannot imagine that the Framers intended that the "town nut job" be guaranteed the right to own and/or carry a firearm.

If they intended that the government have any regulatory power over firearms at all, they would have never worded the Second Amendment the way that they did. Besides, they had experience with a nutjob: King George III, who suffered from moderate to severe mental illness his entire life.

You guys got to understand that when you accept freedom, you accept some risks: there is a risk that some nutjob is going to buy a gun and use it to kill people. But there's a good chance that he won't be very successful if enough people carry firearms and know how to use them in defense of their lives.

There is a MUCH, MUCH greater danger giving the government control over firearms than the rare nutcase who might purchase a firearm to kill.

You can't trade away some inalienable freedoms to the federal government "for safety" and then expect a perfect utopia.
 
If they intended that the government have any regulatory power over firearms at all, they would have never worded the Second Amendment the way that they did.
.

I respectfully disagree. Do you think that it should be okay to yell "fire" in a crowded theater or to threaten the President's life? There are reasonable restrictions on the First Amendment that in no way stifle the intent of the Framers; to permit political discourse. Every Amendment that I can think of is limited to an some extent.

I just happen to think that there are some people who shold not be allowed to own guns. Violent felons and the violently mentally unstable are in that group for me. I see no compelling reason to permit them to own or carry firearms.

With that said, I respect your opinion and see your point.
 
just sent my letter to the editor

Bravo! "Ordinary law-abiding people are pretty trustworthy."

I just read

"Feeling Safe Isn't Safe"
By Michael Barone
Posted 4/29/07

This article/opinion is reasoned, fair, and well-articulated. Light years ahead of other news-magazines. I have to subscribe to US News if this is representative of the standard of journalism here.

The murdrs at Virginia Tech, while tragic, was a catastrophe waiting to happen. Because the administration and students "felt" safe but were really at risk.

A "gun-free" zone has a nice ring to it. But the current restrictions in place fail to disarm the criminal. The unintended consequence of "gun-free"zone restrictions only succeeded in turning such a zone into a shooting gallery for the criminal and the insane.

"The law-abiding citizens should and must have the means to defend themselves. Freedom comes with risks. And feeling safe does not make it so.
 
WethePeople:

consider this: yelling "fire" in a crowded theater should not enjoy special-protected status as free speech.

What's wrong with that statement is the hidden assumption that said speech must first be sanctioned by some "government" other than the group of citizens in that theater. To a pure constitutionalist, anyway.

Plenty of liability suits awaits and deters the numbskull who does yell "fire".



Similarly, why must there be special laws for guns? Mass murder is punishable. And the perp is dead. Why ask for more restrictions from a "government" outside of the group of victims in those classrooms?

Recall the flight that fought back on 9/11. It's the will to fight back against tyranny, including from a deranged college student, that defends freedom and against threats. Not the tool.

Ian
 
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